Topology Mapping

agermoses

Junior Member
Feb 28, 2014
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Hi Guys. I recently joined a firm within their network operations team and on day one quickly identified we are missing a Network topology and I have no logical view of the network.
We have a few tools up and running such as solorwinds but I think the network mapping tool is an extra subscription and not sure if they have purchased that.
Are there any tools you can recomend I can use to scan a large enterprise network to map the core network design.

Thanks
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
81
NetBrain is very good. It's pricey though. It does a lot more than just map as well.
 
Feb 25, 2011
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I've used Observium, zabbix, and cacti personally.

Observium is probably the most plug and play, but in order to "discover" your network topology, it has to have certain discovery protocols already enabled.
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
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81

Good luck with that on a 1000 node network.

Most of the tools mentioned above do rely on cdp/lldp and SNMP to do this work.

They give you a nice graphic chart with tons of additional information.

Using CDP/LLDP to do this on such a large network would be like walking a floppy disk (1.44MB) today across a mile wide campus instead of just zipping it up (or heck sending it uncompressed) via email.

I am hoping a :) or ;) was left out.
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
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With NetBrain, you provide the login and regular + enable password, SNMP info and an address range (optional).

It does the rest.
 

imagoon

Diamond Member
Feb 19, 2003
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If you own Solarwinds, you own Network Atlas. It does topology mapping. "NTM" is their stand alone tool.
 

Railgun

Golden Member
Mar 27, 2010
1,289
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81
Good luck with that on a 1000 node network.

Most of the tools mentioned above do rely on cdp/lldp and SNMP to do this work.

They give you a nice graphic chart with tons of additional information.

Using CDP/LLDP to do this on such a large network would be like walking a floppy disk (1.44MB) today across a mile wide campus instead of just zipping it up (or heck sending it uncompressed) via email.
I can't possibly imagine that large of a network either 1) doesn't have anything or 2) needs to be on a single document.